Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Submergent
and Emergent
Coasts
- Sea Level Change
- Eustatic Change - variations in
relative sea level resulting from
changes in the amount of
liquid water entering the
oceans Global Scale
- Example: glacial
melt water poring
into the oceans at
the end of an ice
age
- Isostatic Change -
variations in relative
sea level associated
with changes in the
buoyancy of the land. Local Scale
- Example: at the end
of an ice age the as
the weight of the ice
is removed the land
slowly rises causing
the relative sea level
to fall
- Day to day it changes with the tides
it also changes on a grander time
scale. these changes are normally
caused by ice ages or major global
events.
- Changes are caused by a
variety of reasons either
Eustatic or Isostatic depending
on if they are have a global or
local effect
- Emergent Coast
- Emergent Coastline - a
coastline exhibiting
features associated
with falling sea levels
e.g. Raised Beaches and
Relict Cliffs
- Emergent landforms
occur when the land's
height rises faster than
the sea's
- Emergent features are features of coastal
erosion that look like they have formed well
above sea level. When they developed when
the sea was at a different level to now.
- Submergent Coast
- Submergent Coast - a
coastline exhibiting features
associated with rising sea
levels e.g. Rias and Fjords
- Are the opposite to Emergent
Coasts. They form when the
sea height rises faster then the
land leading to the land
flooding.